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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T14:16:15+00:00 2026-05-10T14:16:15+00:00

Disclaimer: I’m stuck on TFS and I hate it. My source control structure looks

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Disclaimer: I’m stuck on TFS and I hate it.

My source control structure looks like this:

  • /dev
  • /releases
  • /branches
  • /experimental-upgrade

I branched from dev to experimental-upgrade and didn’t touch it. I then did some more work in dev and merged to experimental-upgrade. Somehow TFS complained that I had changes in both source and target and I had to resolve them. I chose to ‘Copy item from source branch’ for all 5 items.

I check out the experimental-upgrade to a local folder and try to open the main solution file in there. TFS prompts me:

‘Projects have recently been added to this solution. Would you like to get them from source control?

If I say yes it does some stuff but ultimately comes back failing to load a handful of the projects. If I say no I get the same result.

Comparing my sln in both branches tells me that they are equal.

Can anyone let me know what I’m doing wrong? This should be a straightforward branch/merge operation…

TIA.


UPDATE:

I noticed that if I click ‘yes’ on the above dialog, the projects are downloaded to the $/ root of source control… (i.e. out of the dev & branches folders)

If I open up the solution in the branch and remove the dead projects and try to re-add them (by right-clicking sln, add existing project, choose project located in the branch folder, it gives me the error…

Cannot load the project c:\sandbox\my_solution\proj1\proj1.csproj, the file has been removed or deleted. The project path I was trying to add is this: c:\sandbox\my_solution\branches\experimental-upgrade\proj1\proj1.csproj

What in the world is pointing these projects outside of their local root? The solution file is identical to the one in the dev branch, and those projects load just fine. I also looked at the vspscc and vssscc files but didn’t find anything.

Ideas?

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  1. 2026-05-10T14:16:16+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 2:16 pm

    @Ben

    You can actually do a full delete in TFS, but it is highly not recommended unless you know what you are doing. You have to do it from the command line with the command tf destroy

    tf destroy [/keephistory] itemspec1 [;versionspec]            [itemspec2...itemspecN] [/stopat:versionspec] [/preview]            [/startcleanup] [/noprompt]  Versionspec:     Date/Time         Dmm/dd/yyyy                       or any .Net Framework-supported format                       or any of the date formats of the local machine     Changeset number  Cnnnnnn     Label             Llabelname     Latest version    T     Workspace         Wworkspacename;workspaceowner 

    Just before you do this make sure you try it out with the /preview. Also everybody has their own methodology for branching. Mine is to branch releases, and do all development in the development or root folder. Also it sounded like branching worked fine for you, just the solution file was screwed up, which may be because of a binding issue and the vssss file.

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